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Why I Learn the Most From the Young and the Old

12/30/2025

1 Comment

 
​Over the years, I have attended, hosted, and facilitated hundreds of conversations, conferences, and gatherings across the world. Despite being surrounded by brilliant scholars, distinguished professionals, and accomplished leaders, I have realized something that is both surprising and consistent, something that goes beyond credentials or professional achievements:

I learn the most from the very young and the very old.
Not from the middle.
​

This is not a statement about intelligence or merit.
It is a statement about freedom - intellectual, emotional, and existential freedom - and how we lose it and later recover it through the arc of our lives.

​Young Minds: Knowledge Rooted in Intuition

Young people possess a remarkable kind of wisdom - not the wisdom of experience, but the wisdom of intuition. They have not yet been trained to suppress what they feel, censor their creativity, or negotiate their inner voice to meet the conditions of “acceptable behavior.”

Their knowledge is unfiltered.
Their ideas are still fluid.
Their thinking is not yet shaped by institutional expectations or professional pressures.

They approach the world with:

  • Honesty unprotected by ego,
  • Courage unburdened by reputation,
  • Curiosity unrestrained by specialization,
  • Imagination unbroken by “how things are supposed to work.”

Young people learn by feeling - by what resonates, what sparkles, what feels alive. Their internal compass has not yet been overruled by external demands.

This intuitive clarity is one of the purest forms of knowledge. And whenever I listen to the young, I am reminded of how much truth lives in what we often dismiss as “inexperience.”

Older Hearts: Knowledge Rooted in Experience

At the opposite end of life, something extraordinary happens.
Older people - retired scholars, seasoned professionals, lifelong learners - begin to shed the layers accumulated through decades of expectations, achievements, and social roles. What remains is not status, ambition, or competition.

What remains is truth.

They speak from the place experience carved inside them - a place where:

  • Failures have turned into insight,
  • Success has softened into perspective,
  • And time has distilled their knowledge into essence rather than accumulation.

Their wisdom is experiential, reflective, and deeply human. It is not concerned with proving anything. It simply is.

Older people learn by feeling too - but through the lens of everything life has taught them. Their intuition is informed by years of navigating complexity, loss, love, responsibility, and change.

This is why conversations with the elderly often feel like reading the final chapter of a book that explains the rest.

The Middle: Where Ego, Expectations, and Social Scripts Take Over

Between these two groups lies the most complicated phase of life: mid-career.

These are the years when people are often at the peak of pressure - building careers, families, reputations, incomes, and identities. It is also the phase where societal expectations are the strongest, and where deviation from norms feels the most dangerous.

Many mid-career professionals become:

  • Overly cautious,
  • Ego-driven,
  • Obsessed with benchmarks and titles,
  • Hypnotized by the need to perform,
  • Emotionally guarded,
  • Fearful of appearing “less than,”
  • And deeply attached to external validation.

Their stories sound similar, not because they lack depth, but because they are repeating what they believe they should say: what is expected, what is respected, what is professionally “safe.”

This stage of life often produces competence - but not necessarily wisdom.

In psychological terms, the middle years are the most vulnerable to conformity pressure. In sociological terms, it is the phase where individuals are evaluated most intensely by society. In professional terms, it is the era of “career maintenance,” not intellectual risk-taking.

This is precisely why I learn less from the middle - not because these people lack insight, but because they are often prevented from accessing or expressing it.
Their truth is still there.

It is simply buried under responsibility, ambition, fear, and expectation.

Why the Young and the Old Teach Us the Most

​Young people teach us possibility.
Older people teach us meaning.
The middle often teaches us strategy - useful, but rarely transformative.

Young minds remind us of the instinct we once had before society trained us away from it.

Older minds remind us of the understanding we will return to once society’s expectations release their grip.

Both groups learn and speak from intuitive truth - the young from what they feel now, the old from what they felt across a lifetime. In both cases, the source of wisdom is not performance but authenticity.
​
And authenticity is the deepest form of intelligence.

What This Means for Learning Communities

​This insight has shaped Tomorrow People Organization maybe more than anything else. Our environments bring together people from all stages of life - students, senior scholars, early-career researchers, mid-career professionals, and retired experts - creating a uniquely powerful learning dynamic.

I am especially proud that we insist on age diversity as a core value of our conferences.

We welcome and celebrate the presence of freshmen students who bring unfiltered curiosity, and retired distinguished intellectuals in their late 70s and 80s who carry decades of lived experience. This cross-generational mix is not accidental. It is intentional - because learning becomes truly alive when generations meet, listen to one another, and learn from both intuition and experience.

Cross-generational exchange is not just inspiring.
It is academically essential.
​
True knowledge does not live at the top or the bottom, but in the movement between generations - in the dialogue that allows intuition, experience, and curiosity to coexist.

The Wisdom of Feeling

Feeling is often dismissed as “less academic,” yet every breakthrough - in science, leadership, psychology, art, and community - begins with a feeling that something matters.

Young people feel before they know.
Older people know because they have felt.

And at the intersection of these two truths lies the most sophisticated form of knowledge - wisdom.

— Vladimir
Founder, Tomorrow People Organization

1 Comment
Laura Sala link
1/5/2026 01:50:19 pm

As someone who always felt connections before I understood them, this resonates so much with me. It captures how closely wisdom is tied to freedom. The framing of intuition and experience as parallel forms of knowing is especially strong. The young speak before their instincts are conditioned, and the old after the need to perform has fallen away.

The reflection on the middle years feels honest and empathetic. Insight is not absent, but often constrained by expectation, pressure and evaluation. The emphasis on feeling as a legitimate source of knowledge is an important reminder. Many meaningful ideas begin here.

The commitment to cross-generational learning as intellectually essential, not symbolic, brings the message home. When intuition and experience meet without hierarchy, learning becomes more human and more real. Tomorrow people organization, and you, as it's founder have shaped countless lives, mine included and am forever grateful. Look forward to our paths crossing soon.

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    Vladimir Mladjenovic, Founder of Tomorrow People Organization

    About the Author

    Vladimir Mladjenovic is the founder of Tomorrow People Organization, an international platform dedicated to creating meaningful spaces for learning, dialogue, and human connection. For more than two decades, he has brought together educators, researchers, community leaders, policymakers, and changemakers from over 130 countries, guided by a simple philosophy: the world changes when people truly understand one another. His work is shaped by a lifelong fascination with stories, ideas, and the moments where transformation begins. Vladimir’s approach to conference design is rooted in sincerity, intellectual curiosity, and the belief that genuine inclusivity is measured not by appearance, but by the diversity of voices, experiences, and perspectives that come together. When he is not organizing conferences, he writes about leadership, connection, and the human experiences that shape global dialogue.
    He also has two very personal passions: giraffes, whose perspective, grace, and unapologetic uniqueness he finds endlessly inspiring, and his H - the chihuahua - who accompanies him through travels and reflections with unwavering loyalty and humor.

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